Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Review: What We Can Know

What We Can Know What We Can Know by Ian McEwan
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What started very slow for me, a book I nearly gave up on, ended up being something else.

The book starts about 100 years in the future, after many catastrophic events. Tom Metcalfe, along with his sometimes partner, Robin try to teach literature to college kids who have much better things to do and hardly care about the past, let alone literature. Still for Metcalfe, the poetry of Francis Blundy and his wife Vivien, also a writer, are what he studies to endless pursuit. They lived in our times of today. Metcalfe desperately wants to be the one who finds the missing corona poem, the birthday poem Blundy wrote for Vivien.

Certainly the book bogs down with the minutia of Metcalfe’s life, his character is not very appealing. I nearly bailed on the book, but continued on.

Then we get to part two and have a different point of view – it’s Vivien’s diary from the past. Here we learn of her life first hand. She had a curated past for the future researchers, but this diary was the real Vivien, and different than what we knew before.

This is a book that one could have multiple reads and get more out of on each reading. I don’t have that kind of time, too many other books I’d like to get to. But I can appreciate the quality of writing here, despite not really enjoying the main character.

Thanks to Knopf and NetGalley for an uncorrected electronic advance review copy of this book.


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